The Impact of Divorce on School Performance: Evidence from France, 1968-2002

47 Pages Posted: 3 Jan 2004

See all articles by Thomas Piketty

Thomas Piketty

National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) - Centre d'Etudes Prospectives d'Economie Mathematique Appliquees a la Planification (CEPREMAP); Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

Date Written: December 2003

Abstract

For given observable parental characteristics, children with divorced or separated parents tend to perform less well at school than children living with their two parents. This result has been used to argue that softening divorce legislation might be bad for children. This might, however, just reflect a selection effect: parents who decide to separate are presumably parents who fight with each other, etc., and it is unclear whether children growing up in a high-conflict, two-parent family are better off than children with separated parents. In this Paper, I develop two identification strategies suggesting that the selection hypothesis is indeed relevant. First, I look at the school performance of children a couple of years before their parents separate, and I show that they are doing as badly as children already living with only one of their parents. Next, I exploit the large increase in separation rates following the 1975 divorce law reform (as well as cross-regional variations in divorce rates) to show that the performance gap of single-parent children is a declining function of the separation rate, with an elasticity close to -1. Taken together, my results suggest that parental conflicts (rather than separation per se) are bad for children, and that the distribution of conflict intensity between couples has been fairly stable over time and was not significantly affected by the change in divorce law.

Keywords: Divorce, educational performance

JEL Classification: I38

Suggested Citation

Piketty, Thomas, The Impact of Divorce on School Performance: Evidence from France, 1968-2002 (December 2003). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=482863

Thomas Piketty (Contact Author)

National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) - Centre d'Etudes Prospectives d'Economie Mathematique Appliquees a la Planification (CEPREMAP) ( email )

Ecole Normale Superieure
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75014 Paris
France
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+33 1 4313 6259 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://pythie.cepremap.ens.fr/~piketty/

Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

London
United Kingdom

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